I have registered to take part in the ‘End to End’ Land’s End to John O Groats Virtual Run (874 miles) and hope to raise money for Cancer Research and Church Funds. The event started on October 26th  2020 and ends up to 12 months later. I would be delighted if you would sponsor and support me!

“You will be pleased to hear that I arrived in Bristol on time and was surprised to be directed over the Severn Bridge! I really appreciate the pledges of support you have made, so far; these spur me on to keep going out in the bad weather! By the time the February magazine is published, I aim to have made it as far as Cannock Chase in the Midlands – just over 300 miles in total. My plan now is to step up the pace: I am currently lying 776th out of 1,934 starters.

Please message me if you would like to donate to either of the 2 causes above. Thank you 😊”

A heavy slant this month on thrillers, as follows:

“Gone Girl”  –  by Gillian Flynn.  If you’ve not seen the film and like thrillers this is the book for you.  A gripping tale – Nick’s wife, Amy, is missing and he’s a suspect.  But, there are always two sides to every story…..;

“Black Leopard Red Wolf” –  by Marlon James.  To be frank, notwithstanding it reached the final of the National Book Award for Fiction in 2019, not my sort of book – a fantasy world of violence, suspense and mystery.  Set in an ancient Africa, narrated in flashback by Tracker, who possesses the gift of a heightened sense of smell, employed as one of a group of mercenaries seeking a boy who disappeared three years ago;

“The Wicked Girls” –  by Alex Marwood.  When Val McDermid says “So good I wish I’d written it myself” you know that this novel is at the top of the psychological thriller tree.  Well plotted, told in real time and flashback.  Also, an effective social comment on child murderers and their reintegration into society.  I enjoyed reading it; and

“Gaudy Night” –  by Dorothy L Sayers.  From one of the doyennes of 1930’s Golden Age of crime fiction – a mystery novel (no murder), full of suspense interwoven with a love story and an examination of women’s struggles to enlarge their roles and achieve some social independence – is it possible for a woman to have it all?

If you are interested in any of the above books or any others featured since April, please contact Debra Thatcher on 01572 823910 or by email debrathatcher@hotmail.com so delivery can be arranged.

The Rutland Foodbank is currently short of a few things, including:

Smash; Noodles
Chicken roll
Pot Noodles
Cereal Bars

Please see the following link for items currently needed:

https://rutland.foodbank.org.uk/give-help/donate-food/

Thank you everyone for your ongoing support.

Church services have stopped until Sunday 21 February 2021.

St Mary Magdalene and St Andrew’s, Ridlington remains open for private prayer on Sundays and Wednesdays 10am – 4pm;

You can still access the weekly services on YouTube or Facebook;

Church cleaning rota: thank you, this month, to: Mary Aldridge; Anne Harvey and Jacky Morrell.

Thank you to everyone who donated prizes for our Christmas Hamper Raffle: we are truly grateful for your generosity and support. A special thank you to Janet Horwood, who made the beautiful wreath to adorn the lucky winner’s door. You will be pleased to hear that this event raised a much needed £325 for the church.

Winners were: Ruth Lees; Liz Simpson; Debra Thatcher; Mandy Hill; Jo Fairley (wreath)

We look forward to running both carols and raffle again in December 2021!

Thank you, keep safe and best wishes,

Louise Fox, Anne Harvey and Margie Wall on behalf of the PCC.

Following discussions between the Ministry Team and Editors of the Parish Magazine, the magazine will now be going online again for a couple of months. By mid-March we hope to see COVID-19 cases in retreat and many more people vaccinated, enabling a return to print.

You will be able to find the online magazine via the

https://www.rutlandwaterbenefice.info/magazine/

The downside is, of course, that far fewer people will see the magazine. So please do pass this message on and encourage all those you are in contact with to access it.

Thanks to Angela and Alice for dealing with the practicalities of making this change. And best wishes to all normally involved in distribution who are so important for enabling the magazine to reach every household in normal times.

Thank you and keep safe!

Please find below a message from Pippa Madgewick.

Happy New Year to you All.

Sunday services
I’ve spoken to the rest of the ministry team and most churchwardens about Sunday services for the next few weeks. While vaccinations are taking place here and many people enjoy being in church we also know the number of Covid-19 cases locally is currently rising fast and have reached over 3 times the numbers recorded a month ago. We are allowed by the government to hold services in church, but my feeling is that to do so in the next few weeks would be unwise, so I propose to only hold online services from next Sunday up to and including 14th February, the start of the school half term week. By then the lockdown should mean infection rates are falling and also many more vulnerable people should have been vaccinated.

Please can you let churchgoers and your wider village community know that churches remain open for private prayer on Wednesdays and Sundays but not Sunday worship for the next few weeks. In making this decision I’m very torn, but look forward to Easter and beyond, when life should be able to open up a bit more and a degree of normality return.

Church life post-Covid-19
The Bishop has written, inviting us to use this time to think of ways our church life should change as we emerge from lockdown. He wrote:

“My challenge is simply this: that we think, reflect, and discuss, around what we should be learning from this year of lockdown about healthy future patterns for our church life. Many questions suggest themselves: here are just a few.

· What has worked well in lockdown? Can we preserve those things? How?

· Why did numbers go up for the online services in the first lockdown? What does that tell us?

· Why did they not go up in the same way, and even go down, during the second lockdown?

· As we think of the things we had to leave behind temporarily, should we take them all up again? Might any of them really have been unnecessary burdens or even idols?

· In many churches “zoom coffee times” seemed to deepen fellowship. How do we follow that up?

· In many churches and benefices, one simplified and shortened service each week seemed to meet the needs of people who would normally prefer their own particular style and service time. Can we learn from that?

· Towns and cities got most of the publicity over lockdown, but what have rural parishes learned, and what can they teach the rest of us?

· What might this time be teaching us about the right patterns of community service, mission, worship, use of buildings, use of technology, ministry and staffing needs, as we move into the future?

And more. You get the picture. I suggest that church leaders and ministry teams should be asking this sort of question now, and encouraging PCCs to think creatively and radically in these areas over the next year or so. I’d love to hear any answers on a postcard or in an email, and I hope we can discuss these matters with courage and wisdom at deanery and diocesan synods in due time.”

He specifically wants responses from rural parishes. What can we tell him from life in Rutland?

Best wishes,
Pippa

Food donations continue to be vital to enable the Foodbank to continue its great work in giving everyone referred to them a balanced and nutritious three day supply of food.  The next collection from the church porch will be next Wednesday, 13th January.  Please continue to donate generously – your help is much appreciated.

Current shortages are as follows:

Potatoes – tinned or dried;

Tins of fruit, rice pudding, custard;

Jam (not homemade);

Small bags of sugar;

Small long-life sponge puddings;

UHT fruit juice;

Bottles of squash;

Fray Bentos meat pies;

Shower gel, deodorant, shaving gel;

Non-bio washing capsules;

Toilet rolls;

Thank you in anticipation of your assistance.

Debra Thatcher